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THE SNOW LION NEWSLETTER
BUDDHISM WITH AN ATTITUDE The Tibetan Seven-Point Mind Training
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by B. Alan Wallace. #BUATPP $16.95 288 pp., paper
edition.
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"Readers who put the advice this book contains into practice may indeed
transform their minds and achieve a sense of inner peace, the key to greater
peace and happiness within and in the world at large."- The Dalai Lama
All of us have attitudes. Some of them accord with reality and serve us well
throughout the course of our lives. Others are out of alignment with reality,
and cause us problems. Tibetan Buddhist practice isn't just sitting in silent
meditation, it's developing fresh attitudes that align our minds with reality.
Attitudes need adjusting, just like a spinal column that has been knocked out of
alignment. B. Alan Wallace explains a fundamental type of Buddhist mental
training called lojong, which can literally be translated as attitudinal
training. It is designed to shift our attitudes so that our minds become pure
well-springs of joy instead of murky pools of problems, anxieties, fleeting
pleasures, hopes and frustrations. Wallace brings this centuries-old practice
into the twenty-first century.
Here is an excerpt from Buddhism with an
Attitude.
In the early 1970s, a friend of mine complained to the Dalai Lama about how
difficult it is to become enlightened in such a "degenerate time" as ours. This
has been a familiar refrain throughout the history of Buddhism, with just about
every generation referring to its own era as a degenerate time. But the Dalai
Lama's response cut him short. He told him that the only reason so few people
attain enlightenment these days is that they are not practicing with the same
diligence as the great adepts of the past. If people were to practice today with
the same dedication as such great contemplatives as the Tibetan yogi Milarepa,
they would achieve the same results, regardless of how degenerate their times
are.
A key element in realizing the potential of our precious human life of
leisure and opportunity is faith. Faith is also a prerequisite for a successful
career. If you don't have faith in your chosen field, physics for example, it
will be difficult to complete a Ph.D. As in many endeavors, in science it is
necessary to take many things, such as research outside your specialty, on
well-grounded faith. Well-grounded faith in our potential for wisdom,
compassion, and power is an important part of what Buddhists mean by
"opportunity." Another type of faith, blind faith that has no basis in reality,
is useless at best.
The preciousness of life is having time and circumstances to fulfill what
Tsongkhapa, a great fifteenth-century Tibetan Buddhist contemplative, called our
"eternal longing." This is a very significant statement because the Buddhist
meaning of "eternal" includes all previous lifetimes, a very long time. The
Seven-Point Mind-Training advises us to recognize right at the beginning our
opportunity and potential. Also, be effective; don't get sidetracked. In this
life, you have a precious opportunity to fulfill your eternal longing to find
genuine happiness.
Leisure and opportunity are precious and rare. The Buddhist meaning of "rare"
is based on Buddhist cosmology, which in some respects is similar to modern
astronomy concerning the size and age of the cosmos. Western astronomers speak
of solar systems, galaxies, galaxy clusters, and galaxy super-clusters. Western
astronomers attempt to pinpoint the date of the Big Bang, one estimate being
thirteen billion years ago. Buddhist cosmology agrees in principle with the
theory of the universe oscillating between cycles of Big Bang/development/Big
Crunch, another Big Bang/development/Big Crunch, but it places the history of
our present universe at considerably longer than thirteen billion years.
The Buddhist meaning of "rare" is embedded in the Buddhist cosmological
worldview. Within the vast, oscillating billion-fold world systems inhabited by
sentient beings, Buddhists speak of six different modes of sentient life, each
with a different range of experience. Some beings have incredible misery, some
incredible bliss. Human beings have the widest spectrum of experience extending
from misery to bliss. Hell and heaven, it is all here, giving "rare" a special
meaning.
Within this cycle of existence, rebirth after rebirth, extending back through
immeasurable time in an infinite cycle of universes, there are rare occasions
when we rise to a human rebirth of leisure and opportunity. The Buddha used a
metaphor to exemplify the rarity of a precious human life of leisure and
opportunity: Imagine a tortoise swimming submerged in a vast ocean and
resurfacing only once every one hundred years. The times of human rebirth are
similar to the infrequent times the tortoise comes up for air. Now imagine an
ox's yoke floating on the same ocean. Consider the tortoise's chances of poking
his head through the yoke when he comes up for air every hundred years. This is
the meaning of "rarity" in "rare and precious human life of leisure and
opportunity." The object of discursive meditation on the rare opportunity of a
precious human life of leisure and opportunity is to motivate us to use our rare
opportunity wisely.
There is another layer of meaning here which addresses
basic assumptions about our life. Just as Buddhist cosmology describes the outer
world as infinite in space and time, Buddhists also describe human potential, the inner
world, as infinite. Lama Yeshe, a fine Tibetan Buddhist teacher who passed
away some years ago, used to tell this parable to his Western students:
"You are like beggars living in a shack, ignoring your poverty. Meanwhile, just
under the dirt floor, there is a treasure of immeasurable value. You just
need to scrape off the dust and you will find it."
The treasure is really within your own mind and heart. Teachers, traditions,
techniques, all have the single purpose of helping unveil that which is already
within you. If you think otherwise, if you believe happiness is "out there" in a
religious tradition or "with your teacher" or "in the spiritual community," you
are missing the point. Dharma consists of methods to unveil what is already
within you.
The preliminaries require us to examine our basic assumptions about the
nature of life and its potential. This examination shifts the focus of attention
and shakes loose preconceptions. Buddhists aren't alone in realizing the crucial
importance of focus and attention in the quest for well-being and psychological
balance. William James, the eminent American psychologist, said at the end of
the scientifically over-confident nineteenth century, "our belief and attention
are the same fact. For the moment, what we attend to is reality..." When you
begin to attend to facets of reality uncovered by discursive meditation, when
you notice, for example, that your opportunity for realizing your innate human
potential is very rare and precious, the practice of Dharma begins to flow
naturally from your heart. Tibetan lamas emphasize the importance of this life
by advising their students, "If you have a precious human life of leisure and
opportunity, use it well. If you don't have one, get one."
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